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After his second sparring match with Conor McGregor, retired boxer Paulie Malignaggi told ESPN of an intense, "violent" 12 rounds in which he said McGregor showed great improvement from their first session.

"I wanted to be part of this event, but I didn't want to become the story, and that's what this has turned into," Malignaggi told ESPN by phone Thursday night. "I won't release any information about his game plan or what he's working on; I wouldn't do that. But this has become a fiasco. It's a circus.

"And I do want that sparring video released. The UFC's PI definitely has that video. I understand it can't come out now, but Conor, if you have any balls, release what really happened."

On Wednesday, Malignaggi described Tuesday's session as having "a lot of violence." He said he went into the session with a chip on his shoulder because McGregor invited a small audience to watch.

Since then, photos of the session have emerged online, showing McGregor favorably. The Irish star's personal photographer posted a shot of him landing a left uppercut.

In a statement issued later Thursday, Malignaggi emphasized that he believes he and McGregor have "a mutual respect inside the ring" and that his decision was based on issues he disagreed with outside the ring.

"It's not my place to dictate terms in a training camp that is not mine, but it's my place to decide if I want to be a part of it," Malignaggi said in the statement.

Malignaggi, who retired from professional boxing earlier this year, told ESPN on Wednesday there were zero knockdowns during the session but said McGregor had shoved him to the canvas at one point.

"There was a pushdown yesterday," Malignaggi said of the sparring session. "Conor on the inside, he can get a little rough. He shoved me down, you know, but no knockdowns. Obviously, 12 rounds, you're gonna see there's a mark on my face. Very, very hard work for both of us. I was starting to get in a groove in the middle rounds, starting to land some good shots. Conor really came on strong in the end. It was back and forth."

Malignaggi also characterized his relationship with McGregor as being like "frenemies."

Tiernan Bradley, another McGregor sparring partner, confirmed Malignaggi's descriptions of "violence" to the Irish News earlier in the week, saying, "Conor told us all when Paulie came into camp, 'This is not a spar. I want to fight him. I'm ready for a war.'"

Veteran referee Joe Cortez, who has been hired to officiate the sparring sessions, has also commented on the back and forth, saying he has been forced to step in on several occasions to bring the fighters under control.

McGregor, 29, is a two-weight UFC champion and the current lightweight titleholder. This month's lucrative fight against Mayweather will mark his professional boxing debut.

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